Community chest… of parasites
Sick of the environment
How mean is your parasite?
Who’s really in charge here?
Location, location, infestation
100

An assemblage that includes all parasite species found within a single individual host.

What is an infracommunity?

100

Disease ecology studies interactions between hosts and their pathogens in the context of the ________ and ________.

What is the environment and evolution?

100

Virulence is defined as this effect of infection on the host.

What is a reduction in host fitness?

100

Parasites may alter host behaviour, morphology, or physiology primarily to improve this outcome.

What is transmission?

100

Parasites are typically distributed among hosts in this non-random pattern.

What is aggregation?

200

This level includes all parasite species exploiting a particular host subpopulation (not just one individual).

What is a component community?

200

In John Snow’s study, identifying a shared water source revealed this type of disease transmission route.

What is environmental transmission?

200

This type of transmission moves parasites from parents to their offspring.

What is vertical transmission?

200

Type of transmission where manipulation helps parasites move up the food chain via predation.

What is trophic transmission?

200

The total number of parasite individuals of the same species within one host.

What is an infrapopulation?

300

An artificial assemblage describing the full set of parasite species infecting a host species across its entire geographic range.

What is a parasite fauna?

300

One Health integrates human health, non-human animal health, and this key factor.

What is the environment?

300

This metric represents the number of secondary infections produced by one infected individual.

What is the R₀ (basic reproduction number)?

300

An alternative explanation for host behavioural change is that it benefits the host by reducing infection damage.

What is an adaptive host response?

300

When one parasite species reduces the abundance of another, this type of response is observed.

What is a numerical response?

400

This key process (besides interspecific interactions) limits lower infrapopulation size.

What is mating opportunity?

400

Regarding habitat specialisation, this type of host species typically carries more parasites.

What is a generalist host species?

400

According to modern theory, virulence evolves to maximise this quantity.

What is parasite fitness?

400

These parasite-encoded agents can influence host phenotype at multiple biological levels.

What are manipulation factors?

400

This key ecological interaction can cause a shift in the realised niche of a parasite species.

What is competition?

500

This type of distribution model mathematically represents aggregation across infrapopulations.

What is a negative binomial distribution?

500

This ecological effect reduces infection risk when more free-living species are present.

What is the encounter-dilution effect?

500

Contrary to early “conventional wisdom,” optimal virulence often evolves to this relative level.

What is intermediate virulence?

500

This molecular-level strategy allows parasites to imitate host molecules and alter host processes.

What is molecular mimicry?

500

This type of specificity refers to how closely related the hosts of a parasite are.

What is phylogenetic specificity?